The following Report relating to Renfrewshire was drawn up at the desire of the Board of Agriculture



Download 0.95 Mb.
Page3/24
Date23.04.2018
Size0.95 Mb.
#46461
1   2   3   4   5   6   7   8   9   ...   24

CHAPTER II.

STATE OF PROPERTY.


SECTION I.—ESTATES.
THE valuation of the county, as it stands in the cess books, is £69,172 1s. Scots;[40] and the real rent of the landed property in 1795, as collected from the Statistical account of Scotland,[41] and communications with the clergy, was very nearly £67,000 per annum, as appears by the annexed statement, which exhibits also a view of the present rental now augmented to about £126,000.

Rental of the shire of Renfrew.

Parishes. Scot acres. Valuation Scots Rent St. 1795, Rent St. 1810

Town of Paisley,

Abbey of Paisley, 12,848 1 077 10.74118 6 81 11 500 9.701 iii

Greenock, 5,065 2,285 153, 5

Port Glasgow, 671 31613 1 20

Kilmalcolm, 15,758 5,5 0 3, I

Houston and Killallan, 5 996 4,057 8, 2,75

Erskine, 5,065 4,451 2,980

Inchinnan, 2,447 2,39813 4 I 2,1

Renfrew, 3,008 2,776 681 3,151

Innerkip, 9,886 3,177 0 2,961

Mearns, 8,75 1,766 19 5,00

Eaglesham, 12,288 3,073 6 8 2,70

Neilston, 9,958 4,823 6 8I 4,211

Dunlop, part of, 72 5 0 4

Beith, part of, 427 163 6 6 250 2,78 2,24211 0 2,191

Cathcart, greatest pt. of,

Govan, small part of, 344 5 0 504

Lochwinnoch, 15,288 6,831 68 7,600

Kilbarchan,

Eastwood, 7,330 4,33. 6,278 8 3,366 13 8 1,711 4 3,4 6 11122,62: 69,172 10 62,2001117,5
To these sums may be added the rent of gardens Paisley, Greenock, and Port-Glasgow; fisheries,4,80 8,5 fines, quarries, ferries, mills and lochs or reservoirs, 67,00 126,000

This rental was then, (in 1795) and still is, divided among a great number of proprietors, from the small feuar, to the possessor of an extensive estate. The following will be found to be a tolerably exact statement of the division of property in 1795.


From £100 to £200 per annum, 24

£200 to £R300 12

£300 to £R500 13

£500 to £1,000 10

£1,000 to £2,000 7

£2,000 to £3,000 3

£3,000 to £6,000 5

74
The remainder was shared among proprietors possessing under £100 per annum. Seven of the above proprietors were peers, only two or three of whom resided occasionally in the county; and thirty-three were freeholders. It is almost impossible, and, in a work of this kind, by no means necessary, to enumerate the landholders, or to detail the various changes of property: the noble families, however, who have held estates in Renfrewshire for the last century, it may not be improper to mention. Until the middle of that century the Dukes of Hamilton, Montrose, .and Douglas; the Earl of Dundonald, and Lord Ross, were proprietors of extensive estates in this county; and the Earl of Glencairn, and Lord Sempill, enjoyed very considerable properties in it, till the end of the century. New owners have, either by purchase or inheritance, succeeded to the estates of all those noblemen. In the year 1754, the Duke of Hamilton sold his estates in the parishes of Paisley, Neilston, and Lochwinnoch, in a variety of lots, retaining only the superiority. In 1756,, the Duke of Montrose sold the ancient estate and regality of Darnly to Sir John Maxwell of Pollock; to whose old paternal inheritance it forms a valuable addition. In 1764, the Earl of Abercorn re-purchased, from the Earl of Dundonald, his ancient estate and Lordship of Paisley: and, at the close of the century, Lord Sempill sold his property in Inchinnan, Erskine, and Kilbarchan, in separate divisions. The Duke of Douglas's property is now inherited by his nephew Lord Douglas. The Earl of Glasgow, as heir of entail to his grand-father Lord Rosse, is proprietor of the ancient estate of Hawkhead. Mr Cunningham Graham of Gartmore enjoys the estate of Finlayston as heir to the Earl of Glencairn. Lord Cathcart, at the beginning of the present century; purchased the old castle of Cathcart, the ancient property of his fore-fathers; and a small estate round that venerable ruin. The estates of Sir Michael Stewart of Blackhall, and of Sir John Shaw of Greenock, are united in the person of Sir John Shaw Stewart: and Lady Crawford Pollock is now proprietor of Sir Robert Pollock's estate of Over-Pollock.

Property of late has undergone considerable changes in this county. The largest, or most valuable, estate in the shire, was all purchased, within the last forty years, by the present proprietor's father, a gentleman who, by liberal and extensive mercantile pursuits, acquired estates in the counties of Renfrew and Stirling, now worth at least £12,000 per annum. Upon the whole, within the period now mentioned, there may have been landed property to the value of about a million sterling transferred in this small county; and very valuable property of that description is at present for sale.

The largest estates are commonly managed by factors residing on the spot, or in the neighbouring great towns.

The valued rent of the county, as has been already stated, is £69,172 1s. This, exclusive of small properties occupied by feuars, chiefly as gardens, is at present (1810) divided among three hundred and fifty proprietors; seven of whom are noblemen, and thirty upon the roll of freeholders. The following arrangement of the various estates into classes will convey a tolerably exact idea of the manner in which property is at present held: the estates held by peers or freeholders being respectively marked by the letters P or F.
CLASS I.

Estates of upwards of £2,000 Scots of valuation.

Three of these estates, as appears from the table, belong to peers, the other three to commoners holding their lands of the crown, and standing on the roll of freeholders.
CLASS II

Estates from £1,000 to £2,000 Scots of valuation.

Two of these estates belong to peers, one to a minor, one to an heiress holding of the crown, one to an extensive proprietor holding of subjects superior, and one to the burgh of Paisley. Seven of the proprietors stand on the roll of freeholders.
CLASS III.

Estates from £400 to £1,000 Scots of valuation.

One of these estates belongs to a peer, nine to freeholders, one to parliamentary trustees, one to a minor, one to an heiress holding of the crown, and one holds of a subject superior.
CLASS IV.

Estates from £200 to £400 Scots of valuation,

Five of these estates are freehold and the owners enrolled accordingly, one holding of the crown belongs to an heiress, and the remaining eight hold of subjects.
CLASS V.

Estates from £100 to £200 Scots of valuation.

Four of these estates hold of the crown and the owners are upon the roll of freeholders, one belongs to the royal burgh of Renfrew, and thirty hold of subjects.
CLASS VI.

Small properties from £50 to £100 Scots of val,

Of these one small estate belongs to a peer and only one is freehold.
CLASS VII.

Small properties from £34 to £50 Scots of val.


CLASS VIII.

Small properties from £26 to £34 Scots of val.


CLASS IX.

Small properties from £17 to £26 Scots of var.


CLASS X.

Small properties from £10 to £17 Scots of val.


From the foregoing tables the division of property stands thus:

Class. Estates. No. Of Proprietors. Peers. Freeholders. Valuation.

1

2

3



4

5

6



7

8

9



10

Of the whole valuation, £13,151 10s. 4d. belongs to seven peers, one of whom, however, has only a small property in this county and some revenues from feu-duties at Greenock. The remainder belongs to commoners and to the towns of Renfrew and Paisley. There are seventy-three of these commoners who have each of them property exceeding £100, of valued rent; forty-five of whom are precluded from being enrolled as freeholders either by the smallness of their properties, minorities, or the nature of their tenures. There are seventeen estates, the valued rent of which is £30,101 0s. 7d. under the limitations of entail. Of the thirty-one[42] proprietors alluded to in the first three classes, eleven reside constantly, seven occasionally, and thirteen are absentees: and of the forty-nine proprietors alluded to in classes 4th and 5th, twelve are absentees, and thirty-seven resident. The smaller proprietors reside in the county and cultivate their own lands.

It has been already noticed[43] that important changes have taken place in the sales of landed property in Renfrewshire. In addition to what has been already stated, it may be observed, that of the eighty-one proprietors composing the first five classes, thirty-six have acquired their estates by purchase in this county within the last forty years; and that nearly one third part of the whole shire has been sold within that period.
SECTION II.—TENURES.
The lands in this county are either freehold estates, or held in feu under a subject superior. The freehold estates in this county, with a very few exceptions, hold of the Prince of Wales, as Prince and Steward of Scotland; for, as Camden expresses himself, "The title of Baron of Renfrew, by a peculiar right belongs to the Prince of Scotland." It was usual, particularly in the early charters of the Prince of Scotland, to design him from the particular honour in virtue of which he acted as superior of the lands in question. Thus in Carrick, the holding was of the Prince and his successors as Earls of Carrick; and, in Renfrewshire, the clause of holding was of his Royal Highness as Steward of Scotland. In a charter of the lands of Gavin and Risk in this county, granted by Robert III. as guardian of his son, in 1405, to William Boyd a predecessor of the Earl of Kilmarnock, the clause of tenure is; "To be had and held of us and our said son and our heirs the Stewarts of Scotland," because the lands granted lay in the barony of Renfrew, the ancient patrimonial inheritance of the house of Stewart, before they came to the throne. Whatever may have been the yearly revenue of the Prince from the barony of Renfrew in very ancient times, it gradually declined and consisted afterwards of mere casualities of superiority; and the tenures have a long period been mere blench-holdings, i.e. for payment of a pair of spurs, a pair of gloves, or one penny Scots if demanded only.[44]

Before the reformation, the abbeys of Scotland were possessed of very valuable estates, which in some cases were enjoyed by laymen, in virtue of perpetual feu-rights from the clergy, subject to feu-duties or rents reserved. After the reformation and the dissolution of the abbeys, a general act of annexation was passed (in 1587) annexing church lands to the crown. These lands were afterwards granted in temporal Lordships to subjects, who were termed Lords of erection. At this period Lord Claud Hamilton obtained from James VI. a charter erecting the possessions belonging to the abbey of Paisley into a temporal Lordship called the Lordship of Paisley. Of course the Marquis of Abercorn, his successor, enjoys certain small feu duties from some of the lands which formerly belonged to the abbey. But the landholders who have original feus of abbey lands, are in the full enjoyment of the rights and privileges of freeholders, and are entitled to crown charters, paying the rents and casualities of the original abbey-feus to the Marquis, as Lord of erection.

Many estates of considerable value are held in feu under a subject superior, commonly for payment of a very trifling quit-rent or feu-duty, and in some instances for payment of a quantity of grain. The highest grain feu-duty is a boll per acre yearly: but this only occurs in small properties. In the statement already given of the valuation of the different heritors of the county, it appears that there are eighty-one estates composing the first five classes, the valued rent of which extends to £59,658 12s. 5d. Scots.[45] Of this, sum there is about £10,000 Scots of valuation holding of subjects superior, and all the small proprietors composing the remaining five classes, excepting one, hold their lands by the same tenure: so that nearly two sevenths of the property of the county is of this description. The superiors under whom the lands are chiefly held, are; the parliamentary trustee for the late Mr M'Dowall, the trustees for the late Duke of Hamilton, Sir John Shaw Stewart, the Earl of Glasgow, Lord Blantyre, Crawford of Auchinames, Crawford of Crawfordland, Brisbane of Brisbane, Maxwell of Williamwood, and Logan of Fingalton.

Smaller properties are held by burgage tenure chiefly under the burgh of Renfrew, and the town of Paisley. Many of those holding of the town of Paisley are by a tenure peculiarly simple called booking, affording a right complete without charter and sasine, which has probably arisen from the following circumstances:

It would appear, that, the occupiers of the lands of the abbey of Paisley, held their possessions by a tenure somewhat similar to that of kindly tenants, or rentallers; a mode of possession still known in some parts of Scotland, and which is recognized by the supreme courts[46] of the kingdom, and resembling copy-holds in England.

It was customary to insert a minute of the entry of an heir, or of the transmission of lands by conveyance, in the court books or rentals of the abbey, which were, however, made up in a formal manner at a court held for that purpose, and in presence of the sheriff of the county, the bailie of the lordship and other persons of distinction. After certain parts of the ancient lordship of Paisley were acquired by the community of Paisley from the abbot in 1490, it appears that the practice of the abbot's court was continued in the town; the names of persons acquiring, or succeeding to, property held under the town were engrossed or entered by the clerk into the court books of the burgh: hence the origin of what is called heritable booking.

In transmission, however, the feudal form is preserved; in so far as resignation by the former vassal is made in the hands of the bailies, by one of the officers of court, by the symbols of resignation in feudal tenures. This resignation is made for new and heritable booking in place of infeftment to be given to the new entering vassal, whether heir or singular successor.

This peculiarity will, from its own nature soon fall into disuetude. Not appearing in the public records of the kingdom, which is essentially necessary to the transmission of landed property, the inconvenience and insecurity of such tenures, particularly in cases of heritable debts, become obvious; and accordingly a deviation has often been adopted, by introducing a precept of sasine, which is carried into execution in the usual form; and the property must ever afterwards be transmitted, according to the ordinary style of feu-holding.

A great extent of this county, probably 50,000 acres, being held by noblemen and gentlemen under settlement of entail; it may not be improper to mention. the nature of a Scottish entail. By an act of the Scottish parliament in 1685, all his Majesty's subjects are impowered to entail their lands and estates in Scotland, with such provisions and conditions as they shall think fit; and these entails, when completed and published in the manner directed in the act, are effectual against purchasers and creditors. No after possessor of the estate can alter the destination of the original entailer, sell property, lower the rents, or contract debts, which are thus merely personal, and cannot affect the lands. Many entails in Scotland contain clauses limiting the heirs from granting tacks or leases longer than their own lives, or a few years only; and therefore the legislature, in 1770, enacted, that every proprietor,, on certain conditions, may grant leases for fourteen years, and one existing life; or for two lives; or for thirty-one years; and building leases may be granted, for ninety-nine years, to the extent of 5 acres to one person.


Download 0.95 Mb.

Share with your friends:
1   2   3   4   5   6   7   8   9   ...   24




The database is protected by copyright ©ininet.org 2024
send message

    Main page